Obama, Barackin full Barack Hussein Obama, Jr. ( born August 4, 1961 , Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.American politician, who became the third African American, and the first African American male Democrat, to be elected to the U.S. Senate (2005– ) after the end of Reconstruction (1877). On June 3, 2008, he became the presumptive nominee of the Democratic Party for the presidency of the United States.

Obama’s father, Barack Obama, Sr., was originally a goatherd in Kenya; he won a scholarship to study in the United States and eventually became a senior economist in the Kenyan government. Obama’s mother, S. Ann Dunham, grew up in Kansas. Raised in Hawaii and Indonesia, Obama received a bachelor’s degree from Columbia University (1983) and a law degree from Harvard University (1991), where he was the first African American to serve as president of the Harvard Law Review.

After receiving his law degree, Obama moved to Chicago, where he had earlier been a community organizer. He became active in the Democratic Party and lectured on constitutional law at the University of Chicago. He also worked as an attorney on civil rights issues. In 1996 he was elected to the Illinois Senate. In 2004 he was elected to the U.S. Senate, defeating Republican Alan Keyes in the first U.S. Senate race in which the two leading candidates were African Americans. After taking office the following year, Obama quickly became a major figure in his party, and in early 2007 he announced that he would seek the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination in 2008.

Obama’s campaign promise to bring change to the established political system resonated with voters as he headed toward the Iowa caucus in on January 3, 2008, where he pulled off a surprise victory. He was unable to capitalize on the momentum, however, and he placed second to Hillary Clinton in the New Hampshire primary five days later. Obama won more than a dozen states—including Illinois, his home state, and Missouri, a traditional political bellwether—on Super Tuesday, in February 5. No clear front-runner for the nomination emerged, however, as Clinton won many states with large populations, such as California and New York. Obama produced an impressive string of victories later in the month, handily winning the 11 primaries and caucuses that immediately followed Super Tuesday, which gave him the lead in pledged delegates. His momentum was slowed in early March, when Clinton won significant victories in Ohio and Texas. Though still maintaining his edge in delegates, Obama lost the key Pennsylvania primaryin , on April . In early May 22. Two weeks later he lost a close contest in Indiana but won the North Carolina primary by a large margin, widening his delegate lead over Clinton. Obama continued to garner more support from superdelegates—Democratic Party officials allocated votes at the convention that are unaffiliated with state primary results—than Clinton throughout May. On June 3, following the final primaries in Montana and South Dakota, the number of delegates pledged to him surpassed the 2,118 needed to claim the Democratic nomination at the party’s convention in August, and he became the party’s presumptive presidential nominee. He would thus become the first African American to be nominated for the presidency by either major party.

Obama wrote the memoir Dreams from My Father (1995) and The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream (2006), both of which were best sellers.